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Sunday, March 7, 2010

Have you seen someone more beautiful

We know diets high in fat, like those that are prevalent in Western countries, are harmful and can lead to a variety of health problems such as diabetes, heart failure, and obesity. They have also been associated with a decline in cognitive ability over long time spans. High-fat diets have negative short term effects as well. Research published online late last year revealed that after less than 10 days, rats that ate a high-fat diet had a lower ability to exercise and showed serious short-term memory loss. But if that’s not enough to make you reevaluate your diet, this might be. A new study has found that fat-laden diets, particularly those high in trans fat, can significantly raise the risk of ischemic stroke for women over 50.

The study, the largest to look at stroke risk in women and across all types of fat, involved 87,230 women aged 50 to 79. Participants completed a food frequency questionnaire when they entered the study and were put into four groups based on how much fat they ate. They were followed for an average of 7.6 years, at the end of which a total of 1,049 ischemic strokes had occurred. Ischemic stroke is the most common type of stroke, accounting for about 87 percent of all cases. It occurs as a result of an obstruction within a blood vessel supplying blood to the brain. The underlying condition for this type of obstruction is the development of fatty deposits lining the vessel walls, a condition called atherosclerosis.